During the manufacture of slabs with a veined effect a liquid or powder coloring agent is deposited on the surface of a thin layer of starting mixture by means of at least one dispensing device (40) and the resultant mixture is supplied, falling freely, from one end of an extractor belt (30) forming the bottom of a mixture metering/distributor unit, following which the mixture is transferred, falling freely, onto a temporary molding support (14). This results in the production of slabs provided with veining extending through the entire thickness of the slabs and also visible along the whole edge of the slab, even after it has been machined.

Patent
   9174358
Priority
Jul 16 2007
Filed
Jul 04 2008
Issued
Nov 03 2015
Expiry
Jul 04 2028
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
1
67
currently ok
12. A method for manufacturing slabs having a veined effect imitating that of standard natural stone comprising:
preparing at least one mixture, the mixture comprising a bonding agent and at least one granular product that comprises a stone or stone-like or ceramic material having a specific particle size distribution;
loading the at least one mixture into a metering/distributor unit that comprises a hopper and an extractor belt, the hopper having a top mouth for loading the mixture and a bottom opening for discharging the mixture, and the extractor belt having an upper surface that forms a bottom of the hopper;
transferring, by means of the extractor belt, the at least one mixture, having been loaded, to a downstream position beneath a dispensing device;
dispensing at least one colouring or pigmenting agent from the dispensing device onto a surface of the mixture that has been transferred to the downstream position, the dispensing resulting in a non-uniform distribution of the at least one colouring or pigmenting agent on the surface of the mixture, the at least one colouring or pigmenting agent being in solid or liquid form;
further transferring, by means of the extractor belt, the mixture, which has the non-uniform distribution of the agent on the surface thereof, so that the mixture free falls from the extractor belt to be distributed, in the form of a layer having a predetermined thickness, on a temporary support;
subjecting the layer of mixture formed on the temporary support to vibrocompression so as to obtain a rough-formed slab having an order of thickness less than an order of length and width of the slab, the rough-formed slab obtained prior to using any sawing step; and
transferring the rough-formed slab into a hardening station;
wherein the step of subjecting the layer of mixture to vibrocompression is carried out under vacuum, while other steps of the method are carried out under atmospheric pressure; and
wherein the veining effect that results for the rough-formed slab penetrates over an entire thickness of the slab.
1. A method for manufacturing slabs having a veined effect imitating that of standard natural stone comprising:
preparing at least one mixture, the mixture comprising a bonding agent and at least one granular product that comprises a stone or stone-like or ceramic material having a specific particle size distribution;
loading the at least one mixture into a metering/distributor unit that comprises a hopper and an extractor belt, the hopper having a top mouth for loading the mixture and a bottom opening for discharging the mixture, and the extractor belt having an upper surface that forms a bottom of the hopper;
transferring, by means of the extractor belt, the at least one mixture, having been loaded, to a downstream position beneath a dispensing device;
dispensing at least one colouring or pigmenting agent from the dispensing device onto a surface of the mixture that has been transferred to the downstream position, the dispensing resulting in a non-uniform distribution of the at least one colouring or pigmenting agent on the surface of the mixture, the at least one colouring or pigmenting agent being in solid or liquid form;
further transferring, by means of the extractor belt, the mixture, which has the non-uniform distribution of the agent on the surface thereof, so that the mixture free falls from the extractor belt to be distributed, in the form of a layer having a predetermined thickness, on a temporary support;
subjecting the layer of mixture formed on the temporary support to vibrocompression so as to obtain a rough-formed slab having an order of thickness less than an order of length and width of the slab; and
transferring the rough-formed slab into a hardening station;
wherein the step of subjecting the layer of mixture to vibrocompression is carried out under vacuum, while other steps of the method are carried out under atmospheric pressure; and
wherein the further transferring of the mixture so that the mixture free falls from the extractor belt results in the veining effect penetrating over an entire thickness of the rough-formed slab.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein:
the bonding agent of the at least one mixture comprises one of: an inorganic material and a synthetic resin;
the step of subjecting the layer of mixture formed on the temporary support to vibrocompression is carried out by a press, for a predetermined period of time, while a vibratory movement of a pre-chosen frequency is applied to a ram of the press and the layer formed on the temporary support is placed under the vacuum of given intensity and subjected to the action of a press; and
the hardening station subjects the transferred rough-formed slab to a hardening procedure that corresponds to the nature of the bonding agent.
3. The method according to claim 1, further comprising:
drying the rough-formed slab following vibrocompression; and
high-temperature baking the rough-formed slab following drying;
wherein the bonding agent comprises one of: clay and kaolin, and one of: sodium silicate and a mixture of silicasol with polyvinyl alcohol.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein dispensing the at least one colouring or pigmenting agent comprises dispensing the at least one colouring or pigmenting agent from a plurality of positions that are aligned transversely with respect to a direction in which the extractor belt transfers the at least one mixture.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the colouring or pigmenting agent comprises colouring or reflective granules.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the length and width of the rough-formed slab is on the order of meters.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the rough-formed slab is obtained prior to using any sawing step.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein the thickness of the rough-formed slab is on the order of millemeters.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the rough-formed slab is obtained prior to using any sawing step.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the dispensing of the at least colouring or pigmenting agent occurs intermittently, whereby a veining effect imitating that of standard natural stone is formed in the rough-formed slab.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the dispending of the at least colouring or pigmenting agent occurs at irregular time intervals.

This application is a 35 U.S.C. 371 national stage filing from International Application No. PCT/EP2008/058682 filed Jul. 4, 2008, which claims priority to Italian Application No. TV2007A000126, filed Jul. 16, 2007, the teachings of which are incorporated herein by reference.

The present invention relates to the manufacture of conglomerate stone slabs obtained from mixtures consisting of granules of stone and/or stone-like material and a bonding agent, and more specifically to the manufacture of slabs of this type which have particular colouring effects, such as so-called veining, intended to imitate as closely as possible natural stone materials.

More specifically the invention relates to a method and an apparatus for producing the slabs in question. In the description which follows reference will be made to the production of slabs with a veined effect, it being understood that reference thereto is made solely by way of a non-limiting example.

For many years so-called Bretonstone slabs have been known, this name referring to a particular manufacturing technology which essentially envisages the preparation of one or more starting mixtures comprising granules of stone and/or stone-like material with a specific particle size distribution and a bonding agent which made be of an inorganic nature (such as cement) or a synthetic resin which can be hardened (by the action of heat and/or a catalyst).

The starting mixture is distributed in the form of a layer of predetermined thickness on a temporary moulding support (such as a conveyor belt or a tray mould) and then subjected, for a predefined period of time and under a vacuum of given intensity, to the action of a press while a vibratory movement of prechosen frequency is applied to the press ram.

The resultant rough-formed slab is then transferred to the hardening stage using procedures which depend on the nature of the bonding agent.

In the continuation of the present description reference to Bretonstone slabs and/or the Bretonstone method is understood as meaning slabs obtained with the method described above.

According to an already known method for manufacturing Bretonstone slabs with a veined effect, after the step involving deposition of the starting mixture on the temporary support, colouring agent is distributed in an irregular manner on the surface of the layer of mixture and then the colouring agent is mixed up with the mixture using a spiked tool so that the colouring agent penetrates into the thickness of the mixture to a depth such that the finished slab, after the usual sizing and polishing operations, has veining similar to that of the natural stone from which the granules used in the mixture are obtained.

For further details regarding this method and the associated apparatus reference should be made to the patent IT-A-1,328,246 (corresponding to WO-A-03/027042) in the name of the same applicant, herein incorporated by reference.

This method is useful solely in the case where the finished slab must not be used such that its side edges are visible.

In fact, it has been found that, no matter how effectively mixing up of the colouring agent may be performed by means of the spiked tool, the colouring agent penetrates into the thickness of the mixture—and can therefore be seen in the finished slab—only over a section of a few millimeters, corresponding to not more than half the thickness of the finished slab.

There exist, however, certain uses of the finished slabs where the edge or side of the slab also remains visible (as, for example, in the case of so-called kitchen or bathroom tops) and, after polishing, the veining can be noted only in a thickness of a few millimeters from the top surface, while it is absent in the remainder of the edge or side to the detriment of the aesthetic characteristics of the slab laid.

According to an alternative solution, also known, for obtaining Bretonstone slabs with a veined effect, the mixture is distributed on the moulding support by means of a weighing type distributor unit with the characteristic features described in the patent IT-A-1,335,533 (corresponding to WO-A-2004/039547), herein incorporated by reference.

In this case, the starting mixture, before being loaded into the metering unit, is made to pass underneath devices which apply liquid or powder colouring or pigments agents onto its surface.

Since the mixture is loaded into the metering unit, falling freely, and then conveyed to the outlet for discharging onto the moulding support, it undergoes a certain degree of remixing which in turn results, on the one hand, in a substantial shortening of the veining and, on the other hand, in a not insignificant diffusion of the pigment in the mass of the mixture which is therefore at least partly coloured throughout the mass.

Another technology known for many years and aimed at the manufacture of slabs designed for internal and external cladding of buildings as well as the manufacture of articles similar to ceramic articles is one where granules of stone, stone-like or ceramic material, preferably in the form of sand, with a suitable particle size distribution, are mixed with the components normally used for the manufacture of ceramic materials, usually in powder form, and consisting mainly of clay or kaolin.

The resultant mixture is wetted with a bonding agent, which may be sodium silicate in aqueous form or a mixture of silicasol and polyvinyl alcohol.

With this starting mixture a layer of predetermined thickness is formed on a temporary support which is then subject to a vibrocompression step, resulting in a rough-formed slab.

The slab, after a drying step, in order to remove the water present in the mixture, undergoes a baking step at a high temperature (in the region of 1200° C.).

Below this technology, the associated method and the resultant slabs will be referred to by the generic name of “Lapitech”.

This type of slab and technology is also affected by the same problem already mentioned with regard to the Bretonstone slabs.

It is therefore desirable to provide a method and a corresponding apparatus for manufacturing slabs of the Bretonstone or Lapitech type in which the slabs have coloured veining with a length comparable to that of standard natural stone and this veining is visible throughout the thickness and therefore along the entire edge of the finished slabs.

This object is achieved with a method for manufacturing slabs in which:

the method being characterized in that at least one colouring or pigmenting agent is distributed on the surface of the mixture being transferred by means of said extractor belt before the mixture is distributed, falling freely, onto said temporary moulding support.

Advantageously, the metering/distributor unit used in said method is that described and illustrated in Italian patent application No. TV 2004A000118 (corresponding to WO-A-2006/045728), herein incorporated by reference.

In the case where Bretonstone slabs are manufactured, the method according to the present invention envisages that: the bonding agent contained in the at least one starting mixture may be of an inorganic nature (such as cement) or a synthetic resin which can be hardened (by the action of heat and/or a catalyst); the layer formed on said temporary moulding support is subjected, for a predefined period of time and under a vacuum of given intensity, to the action of a press, while a vibratory movement of prechosen frequency is applied to the press ram; the resultant rough-formed slab is subjected to the hardening step using procedures which depend on the nature of the bonding agent.

In the case where Lapitech slabs are manufactured, where said starting mixture (as already mentioned) comprises, in addition to the granules of stone, stone-like or ceramic material with a prechosen particle size, in particular in the form of sand, also materials known per se for the manufacture of ceramic materials, such as clay and kaolin in powder form and an agent chosen from sodium silicate and silicasol together with polyvinyl alcohol, the rough-formed slab resulting from the vibrocompression step is subjected to a drying step and then a high-temperature baking step such that the clay or kaolin forms a bonding matrix for the abovementioned granules.

In the preferred embodiment of the invention said at least one colouring agent is distributed on the surface of the mixture in a non-uniform manner.

In turn the apparatus according to the invention is that described in the already cited Italian patent application No. TV2004A000118, except that it comprises as a characterizing aspect at least one device for dispensing colouring or pigmenting agent positioned at the downstream end of the extractor belt forming the bottom of the already mentioned hopper so as to dispense said colouring agent onto the surface of the layer of mixture transported by means of said extractor belt towards the position where it falls freely onto the said temporary moulding support.

It has been established that with the method and the apparatus according to the present invention the colouring agent is distributed randomly and not uniformly within the mass mixture, which falls into the temporary support producing the aforementioned veining which affects the entire thickness of the finished slab.

The colouring or pigmenting agent may be in solid form (preferably a dry powder) or liquid form and may be supplemented with or replaced by colouring or reflective granules which result in very attractive special effects in the finished product and throughout its thickness.

Considering now specifically the colouring agent dispensing device associated with the abovementioned apparatus, it may comprise a plurality of devices, namely one for each colouring agent, which are controlled independently of each other as regards the start and end of the dispensing operation, which may take place continuously or intermittently.

In the case where there is a plurality of dispensing devices, they may be mounted transversely with respect to the direction of feeding of the extractor belt which transports the layer of mixture discharged by the metering/distributor unit, so as to cover the entire width of the mixture layer.

Alternatively, it is possible to envisage a smaller number of dispensing devices mounted on a cross-member fixed at the top and transversely with respect to the extractor belt for the layer of mixture and movable along the said cross-member.

The invention will now be described with regard to the accompanying drawings which show, by way of a non-limiting example, two variations of embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention.

More specifically:

FIG. 1 is a front view of the apparatus provided with a plurality of units for dispensing colouring or pigmenting agents according to the invention;

FIG. 2 is a partially sectioned side view of the apparatus according to FIG. 1;

FIG. 3 is a side view of solely the mixture metering/distributor unit equipped with a device for dispensing colouring agent in powder form according to a first embodiment of the invention which is also visible in FIG. 2;

FIG. 4 is a view similar to that of FIG. 3 of a device for dispensing liquid colouring agent according to a second embodiment of the invention which is also visible in FIG. 1;

FIGS. 5 and 6 are axonometric views of products which can be obtained with the present invention.

FIGS. 1 and 2 show an apparatus according to the present invention for distributing, in the form of a thin layer, on a support used in a plant for producing stone articles, a mixture based on agglomerate stone or ceramic material, to which colouring substances are added depending on the predetermined aesthetic effects.

In brief, the apparatus comprises a frame 10 which supports a surface 12 on which a temporary moulding support 14 is placed for each operating cycle, on which support a layer of mixture 18, supplied by a metering/distributor device denoted overall by the referenced above 20, is deposited in a free-falling manner.

The mixture distributor 20 in turn comprises a hopper 22 with a top mouth 24 for loading fresh mixture, a shaped or conveying wall 26 with a profile curved towards the inside of the hopper 22 and a mixture discharge opening 28 at the end of said shaped wall 26.

An extractor belt 30, positioned underneath said hopper 22, forms with its upper surface 30 the bottom of said hopper.

The belt 30 is used to convey and deposit a uniform layer of said mixture, after it has flowed inside the hopper 22 and passed out through said discharge opening 28, on said temporary support 14 which is positioned at a lower level than said extractor belt. At the same time a relative movement of said hopper 22 and said support 14 is maintained so that the layer of mixture distributed on said support is uniform.

In order to ensure the relative movement of hopper 22 and temporary support 14, the metering/distributor device 20 is mounted on a carriage denoted overall by the reference number 34 and movable by means of roller wheels parallel to the surface 12 of the apparatus.

From FIG. 1 it can be readily understood how the distribution and metering hopper 22, the extractor belt 30 as well as the mixture discharge opening 28 extend substantially over the entire width of the surface 12 so that the resultant product is a slab which has notable dimensions not only lengthwise but also transversely. In this connection it is worth noting that the slabs which can be obtained with this technology may have and in reality also have widths greater than 1.5 meters and lengths greater than 3.3 meters.

For further details regarding this apparatus reference should be made to the already mentioned Italian patent application No. TV2004A000118.

According to the invention, at least one device for dispensing colouring agent, denoted by the general reference number 40, is positioned at the downstream end of the extractor belt 30, preferably downstream of the discharge opening 28 of the hopper 22.

In this connection it should be noted that the colouring agent may be dispensed at any point on the upper surface 32 of the extractor belt 30, except for the zone immediately underneath the hopper 22.

In particular, in accordance with the embodiment shown in FIGS. 1 and 4, at the downstream end zone of the extractor belt 30, the carriage 34 has, mounted thereon, a support structure comprising a cross-member 36 with, fixed thereto, a plurality of devices for dispensing colouring agent—denoted by the reference numbers 40 (a-m), respectively—each of which has a nozzle intended to emit a continuous or discontinuous jet of colouring agent (which, as ready mentioned, may be liquid or in the form of dry powder) which strikes a strip of the layer of mixture deposited on the tray mould, so as to cover overall the entire width of the mixture.

As regards the structure of the colouring agent dispensers, it is preferably that described in the aforementioned Italian patent application TV2004A000118 and illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 thereof.

The surface of the mixture, before leaving the extractor belt 30, is therefore sprinkled with colouring material in a manner which depends on the operating mode of the dispensing nozzle. In fact, if the dispensing nozzle is operated intermittently and at irregular time intervals, it is evident that the distribution of colouring agent on the surface of the mixture will not be homogeneous and pre-ordered.

Since the mixture with colouring agent is then transferred by means of a free-falling action onto the temporary moulding support and since the mixture when falling produces coloured lumps on the surface, the colouring agent, without uniformly colouring the mixture, is able to produce during the subsequent vibrocompression step colouring effects which affect the entire thickness of the manufactured article, similar to the veining of natural stones.

If, on the other hand, the mixture were to be uniformly coloured, the desired object would not be achieved, namely the formation of veining imitating that of standard natural stone.

At the same time, as demonstrated by experimental tests, the coloured zones affect the entire thickness of the mixture, so that the predefined object of the invention is fully achieved.

The variant shown in FIG. 4 proposes the alternative solution of mounting on the cross-member 36 an assembly with just a few colouring agent dispensing devices 38, said assembly 38 having, connected thereto, a drive system for controlled displacement thereof along the cross-member 36.

It is evident that a solution midway between those described above is possible, namely one where a smaller number of dispensing devices 40 are mounted on the cross-member 36, with the each of them designed so that it is movable along the cross-member over a limited distance, so as to ensure more correct distribution of colouring agent on the surface of the mixture which is transported by the upper surface 32 of the extractor belt 30 towards the temporary support 14.

The product obtained fully satisfies the aforementioned requirements and has the appearance shown in FIGS. 5 and 6 (where it is possible to see a slab with a toroidal edge and a slab with a semi-toroidal edge, respectively, the veining being visible throughout the thickness of the slab and therefore also along its edges).

Finally, it should be noted that with the present invention a further advantage is achieved, mainly that of avoiding the need for any further operation on the mixture already deposited on the temporary support (for example using spiked tools) in order to ensure greater distribution of the colouring agent, with the obvious advantage in terms of simplification of the apparatus and the operating cycle.

It is understood that conceptually and mechanically equivalent modifications and variations are possible and may be envisaged without departing from the scope of the present invention as defined in the accompanying claims.

Toncelli, Luca

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